Fishery Resources and State of Stocks Exploitation in the Waters of the Gulf of Thailand, East Coast of Peninsular Malaysia and Andaman Sea
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12067/965
2024-03-29T09:43:31ZFishery Resources and State of Stocks Exploitation in the Waters of the Gulf of Thailand, East Coast of Peninsular Malaysia and Andaman Sea
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12067/969
Fishery Resources and State of Stocks Exploitation in the Waters of the Gulf of Thailand, East Coast of Peninsular Malaysia and Andaman Sea
1997-01-01T00:00:00ZFishery Resources and the State of Exploitation of some Economic Fish Species in the South China Sea Area Case Study: Malaysia and Thai Waters
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12067/968
Fishery Resources and the State of Exploitation of some Economic Fish Species in the South China Sea Area Case Study: Malaysia and Thai Waters
Saikliang, Pirochana
This section contains a list of some important economical fish species, both pelagic and demersal. There are 18 pelagic and 7 demersal species. These fish are dominant in Malaysian and Thai Waters. The information for each species includes name, characteristics, biological & distribution, fishing gears used and total landing quantities. The total landings are derived from statistical data obtained 1985-1994, also included are minimum, maximum, and average catches, as well as a brief annotation on their state of exploitation and utilization.
1997-01-01T00:00:00ZMarine Resources and Fisheries in the Exclusive Economic Zones of Thailand
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12067/967
Marine Resources and Fisheries in the Exclusive Economic Zones of Thailand
Bhatiyasevi, Udom
Geographically and migratorily, there are four marine fishery resource groups in Thai waters: i) Local fish stocks, ii) Shared transboundary fish stocks, iii) Shared transboundary migratory fish stocks, these 3 fishery resource groups are found as common resources in the Gulf of Thailand where it borders the South China Seas and iv) Highly migratory fish stocks which is the one of the four groups that appear off the Andaman Sea coast of Thailand bordering the high seas of the Indian Ocean. Recommendations for management and conservation of those fish stocks are reported as follows:
1) Development of a legal framework for better promulgation and enforcement of fishery conservation measures;
2) Harmonising study of migratory paths and patterns of highly migratory species by tagging, fish population dynamics, development of fishery statistical systems and exchange of information and experience;
3) Adjust and modify fishing patterns in a way to ensure sustainability and
4) Rehabilitation of the desirable fishery resources and specialised ecosystems and introduction of new hi-tech and other methodologies such as early warning systems on oil spill contingencies and red tide phenomena, including electronic information exchange and continuous automatic monitoring of pollution levels in the EEZs and the high seas
1997-01-01T00:00:00Z